The League of Gentlemen

The League of Gentlemen

1999
The League of Gentlemen
The League of Gentlemen

The League of Gentlemen

8.4 | en | Comedy

The League of Gentlemen is a British comedy television series that premiered on BBC Two in 1999. The show is set in Royston Vasey, a fictional town in Northern England based on Bacup, Lancashire. It follows the lives of dozens of bizarre townspeople, most of whom are played by three of the show's four writers—Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton, and Reece Shearsmith—who, along with Jeremy Dyson, formed the League of Gentlemen comedy troupe in 1995. The series originally aired for three series from 1999 until 2002 followed by a film in 2005. A three-part revival mini-series was broadcast in December 2017 to celebrate the group's 20th anniversary.

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Seasons & Episodes

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EP6  How The Elephant Got Its Trunk
Oct. 31,2002
How The Elephant Got Its Trunk

After a bag is blown out the window of the Charity Shop Vinnie spots it on a country road and sets out in hot pursuit. Papa Lazarou returns and all the series' loose ends are tied up.

EP5  Beauty and the Beast (Or, Come into My Parlour)
Oct. 24,2002
Beauty and the Beast (Or, Come into My Parlour)

Regular Cast: Mark as Tony / Iris Krell [voice] / Neds / Professor Breastpinch'd Steve as Charlie Hull Reese as Stella Hull / Judee Levinson / Keith Drop CHARLIE & STELLA / MRS LEVINSON: The Hulls' marriage seems to have disintegrated beyond repair and Stella's hooked on playing fruit machines. Meanwhile, Charlie starts working for Judee Levinson at her new beauty salon, the ""Spit and Polish"", doing massages on blindfolded clients, who think it's Judee doing them herself. His healing hands wow the customers, until an old man asks if he can do any ""extras"". Word spreads and the salon is packed with the men of Royston Vasey, blissfully unaware they are being w* off by Charlie. When Tony comes for one of the ""special massages"", Charlie becomes obsessed with him and falls in love with him, eventually telling Tony he's the masseur with the magic hands. Tony is disgusted and the s* hits the fan: Stella wins big on the fruit machines and jets off overseas, and Judee sacks him.

EP4  The Medusa Touch
Oct. 17,2002
The Medusa Touch

Regular Cast: Mark as Alvin Steele / Les McQueen Steve as Daddy / Nancy Glass / Barbara [voice] / Anne Hand Reese as Noel Glass / Judith Buckle / Terry Lollard B&B proprietors Alvin and Sunny invite their weekend 'Sexplorers' to join them in a voyage of auto-erotic discovery - although Alvin would prefer to be at the garden centre. But who is the mysterious femme fatale in the dwarf conifers and what is the secret of the fearsome 'Medusa'? The Ending: Lawrence Llewellyn Bowen is having a fag with his wig off in the backyard of the Windermere when the white van comes crashing through the wall, sending tons of bricks down on him...

EP3  Turn Again Geoff Tipps
Oct. 10,2002
Turn Again Geoff Tipps

Geoff is fired from his job and leaves in an attempt to make it as a stand-up comedian in London. There he runs into the Legz Akimbo team and Mike.

EP2  The One-Armed Man Is King
Oct. 03,2002
The One-Armed Man Is King

Lance bribes hospital disc jockey Mike King to arrange an under-the-counter arm transplant. Meanwhile, Glenn and Barry fail miserably in an attempt to recover outstanding debts.

EP1  The Lesbian and the Monkey
Sep. 26,2002
The Lesbian and the Monkey

springs Pauline from jail--provided she can find evidence to convict Mickey and get him off the Dole.

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8.4 | en | Comedy | More Info
Released: 1999-01-11 | Released Producted By: BBC Studios , Country: United Kingdom Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006t8d1
Synopsis

The League of Gentlemen is a British comedy television series that premiered on BBC Two in 1999. The show is set in Royston Vasey, a fictional town in Northern England based on Bacup, Lancashire. It follows the lives of dozens of bizarre townspeople, most of whom are played by three of the show's four writers—Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton, and Reece Shearsmith—who, along with Jeremy Dyson, formed the League of Gentlemen comedy troupe in 1995. The series originally aired for three series from 1999 until 2002 followed by a film in 2005. A three-part revival mini-series was broadcast in December 2017 to celebrate the group's 20th anniversary.

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Cast

Mark Gatiss , Steve Pemberton , Reece Shearsmith

Director

Jon Plowman

Producted By

BBC Studios ,

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Reviews

Jackson Booth-Millard I had seen a few clips from the show over the years, and I had seen the stars in dark comedy sitcom show Psychoville and dark comedy anthology show Inside No. 9, but I had never seen the full show, it was only when it returned in 2017 that I was finally able to watch it all. Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton and Reese Shearsmith, along with writer Jeremy Dyson, formed The League of Gentlemen comedy troupe in 1995, the show originally started on BBC Radio, and aired on television in 1999. Basically the show is set in the fictional Northern English village of Royston Vasey (apparently, the real name of comedian Roy Chubby Brown), and follows the lives of the bizarre characters. Edward and Tulip "Tubbs" Tattsyrup (Shearsmith and Pemberton) run the Local Shop, they have distinct pig noses, they challenge strangers that enter the shop, and humiliate or murder them, their catchphrases include "Are you local?", "This is a local shop, for local people; there's nothing for you here", "Hello, hello? What's going on? What's all this shouting? We'll have no trouble here!". Harvey Denton (Pemberton) and his wife Val (Gatiss) live in a 1970s-style house in an insanely ordered manner, their completely normal nephew Benjamin (Shearsmith) comes to live with them, he is bemused by their strict rules of cleanliness and use of amenities, to the point where he is trying to get away. Pauline Campbell-Jones (Pemberton) is a Restart officer working at the job centre leading mandatory (and exceedingly condescending) Restart courses for unemployed attendees, including well-meaning simpleton Mickey M. Michaels (Gatiss), she eventually loses her job after confrontations with Ross Gaines (Shearsmith), and goes to prison, is released and marries Mickey, and then develops dementia, going to a state where she believes she is still has regained her position at the job centre. Papa Lazarou (Shearsmith) is the blackfaced leader of the travelling Pandemonium Carnival, a circus and freakshow, he is often seen terrorising women and kidnapping them to make them his "wife", he only appears in one episode a series (and the Christmas Special), but became one of the most popular characters, with his gruff voice and circus ringleader costume, his imitable catchphrases include "Hello, Dave!" and "You're my wife now!". Geoffrey "Geoff" Tipps (Shearsmith), Mike Harris (Pemberton), and Brian Morgan (Gatiss) all work at the local plastics injection-moulding company, while Mike and Brian are calm, Geoff is the most distinctive of the trio, being tactless and distasteful, failing to be funny when he wants to be, getting into fits of rage, and then doing whatever he can to get by, legal or illegal. Mr. Matthew Chinnery (Gatiss) is the cheerful but accident-prone local veterinarian, most of the animals he treats end up dying, due to these many accidents he feels he may be losing his sanity, and his accidents may be curse, one which never seems to lift. Les McQueen (Gatiss) is former rhythm-guitar player for 1970s glam rock band Creme Brulée, he constantly bothers other aspiring musicians and others he meets, boring them with tales of a now outdated and unfashionable music era. Reverend Bernice Woodall (Shearsmith) does not believe in God or the teachings of the Bible and takes perverse pleasure in constantly berating and humiliating parishioners for their sins. Herr Wolf Lipp (Pemberton) is a gay German teacher and self-proclaimed "Queen of Duisburg", he is also a paedophile who likes young boys, he has not mastered the English language, so often mistakes phrases from others as double entendres, his catchphrase is "Alasclah". Hilary Briss (Gatiss) is the local butcher, he sells a secret "special stuff", mysterious and highly addictive foodstuff. Legz Akimbo is a travelling theatre company, Oliver Plimsoles (Shearsmith) is the leader, writing and directing all their work, Phil Proctor (Gatiss) is gay and getting many film and television roles, making Oliver and Dave Parkes (Pemberton) jealous, they travel around mostly performing shows for schools and halls with performances consisting of delivering "helpful" advice to their audiences. Barbara Dixon (Paul Hays-Marshall and Michael Gallagher, voiced by Pemberton) is a transsexual taxi driver, often picking up characters from the village, she is only seen in glimpses, with noticeable male attributes, including chest hair and a deep gravelly voice, she often discusses with her passengers all disgusting details of her transition. The plot of the first series involved a new road being built through the village, meaning more strangers visiting the town, this ends when the construction manager is taken in by his long-lost parents, Tubbs and Edward, to live "locally". The plot of the second series saw many residents experiencing a deadly nose bleed epidemic, killing many; and the Local Shop murders are discovered. The Christmas Special sees three characters seeking the advice of the Reverend on Christmas Eve, with their stories seen in flashback, Bernice hates Christmas because of a terrifying childhood experience, her mother was kidnapped, and the kidnapper, Papa Lazarou, returns to take her. The fourth series, which was produced as a celebration of the 20th anniversary for the BBC Radio series, catches up with the characters, Royston Vasey is threatened by boundary changes, Bernice has escaped and returned to become the Mayor, she launches a campaign to save the town. Tubbs and Edward have survived the fire that burned down the Local Shop, the Prime Minister eventually changes his mind about the village boundaries, while Tubbs and Edward go on the run after killing a councillor and a local journalist, and a photo booth causing people to disappear is revealed to be a trap by Papa Lazarou, bringing women down into his mine. Also starring Jeremy Dyson as Various Characters, Roy Chubby Brown as Mayor Larry Vaughan, Car Share's Sian Gibson as Tricia, twins Megan De Wolf and Rosy De Wolf as Chloe and Radclyffe Denton, David Arnold as Victorian Gentleman with Fox, Freddie Jones as Dr. Magnus Purblind, Liza Tarbuck as Donna, Doctor Who's Nicholas Briggs as Garden Centre Worker, Christopher Eccleston as Dougal Siepp, Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen, Andy Nyman as Carl, Coronation Street's Brooke Vincent as Casey Glass and David Morrissey as Gareth Chapman. The first and series remained as a sketch show style format, with running sitcom themes, the Christmas Special only had two or three of the regular characters and seemed almost like a separate thing, and the fourth series tried mildly well to recapture the spirit, the show is obviously inspired and paying homage to great horror movies, all in all it is both a scary and funny show, and spawned its own spin-off movie, an entertaining dark comedy series. Job Seekers - The Interview was number 23, the Circus Comes to Town was number 14, and Tubbs and Edward - Road Men was number 3 on The 50 Greatest Comedy Sketches, Tubbs was number 16 on The 100 Greatest TV Characters, Pauline was number 22 and Papa Lazarou was number 8 on The World's Greatest Comedy Characters, "You're my wife now!" was number 36 and "This is a local shop for local people" was number 10 on 50 Greatest Comedy Catchphrases, the Christmas Special was number 32 on The 100 Greatest Christmas Moments, and it was number 24 on the 100 Greatest Scary Moments, and the show was number 41 on Britain's Best Sitcom. Very good!
wolvesguardmycoffin The sheer thought of being trapped in the Local Shop causes my spine to shiver and my mind to laugh...The League of Gentlemen is, as the title of this review says, something that has been forgotten by the comedy-freaks nowadays... At least it seems so to me and the network I associate with. It's a brilliant mixture of stereotypical satire, horror, perversions and (obviously) comedy.Now, being Swedish, I had never heard of this series before I visited some friends in Rome, Italy and I can never thank them enough! We get to see many varying characters in different environments in the small town of Royston Vasey and as the series go, their stories become darker and more morbid by each episode. It's basically a trip from a dark kind of almost-innocence into an inferno of pure perversion and evil. It's brilliant.The downsides of this series, is that the comedy is decreasing in the later episodes and they might lose track of you. It's still funny if you are into dark humor, but I can imagine that the series lost some of it's fans along the way.The minds behind this series are very good at demonstrating their excellent acting-skills, portraying everything from inbred shop-owners to transvestites and failing stand-up comedians, among others. I would not recommend it to sensitive people. But for the ones that can separate reality from comedy, it would definitely be worth your while.
lisa-auer The sitcom "The league of Gentlemen" follows the lives of several bizarre inhabitants of the fictional village "Royston Vasey". The different scenes are linked together by their common setting.In the first series, a sketch show, the main plot deals with a new road which is going to be built through Royston Vasey. Consequently, more foreigners visit the small town. But Edward and Tubbs, the owners of a "local" shop, which is actually far away from the town, do not like foreigners. Whenever a visitor enters their shop, they kill him. In my opinion some scenes are kind of tasteless and not funny at all, for example, when the couple absorb two engineers who want to build the new road. Edward drums, while Tubbs is dancing half naked around the victims. Moreover Pauline lives in Royston Vasey. She works at the local Job Centre. Although Pauline hates the people she has to work with, the woman does not want to loose her job. So when an unemployed man gets an interview as fireman, she does not allow him to go because he is not ready for the job yet.Then there is Barbara Dixton, a transsexual taxi driver who goes into great detail about "her" sexual conversion.Furthermore the vet, Mr. Chinnery, always kills animals instead of curing them. In one case, he comes to a farm and is leaded into the sitting room, where a dog lays in his basket. The farmer goes outside. On the assumption that the dog is the sick animal, Mr. Chinnery euthanizes him. A second later, the farmer opens the door, holding the "real" sick animal, a sheep, in his hand.Some more inhabitants are a husband and his wife who are visited by their nephew (his friend is killed by the shop owners, by the way). The couple is very tidy. They have, for example, towels in different colours. Each colour stands for one part of the body. Besides, they have thousands of keys, marked with different colours and precisely classified.In my opinion, the actors play very well. By playing women, the scenes become comical. The costumes are suited to the actors, too. Tubbs is wearing a scarf and some crazy characters, for example Edward, have unappetizing black teeth. The show has a great deal of dark humour, typical British. The set design reflects the mood of the series. The village and all the houses look grey and are decayed. Around the local shop there is often fog which strengthens the threatening effect. Even the village sign is ominous: "Welcome to Royston Vasey. You will never leave."Although I think that the actors do a great job, this type of series is not my taste.
MartinHafer Well, I just discovered that there is a show more disgusting and shocking than "Little Britain" and I like it! "The League of Gentlemen" is a sick British comedy that is about the most awful, insane and disgusting small town in all the UK. This place makes Dibley and Craggy Island (from "The Vicar of Dibley" and "Father Ted") seem pretty normal!! The format of the show is a lot like LITTLE Britain except that all of it centers around the townspeople of this one hellish town. Both shows feature the same skits again and again every episode and some obviously inspired "Little Britain" (particularly the job seeking class skit). But the show differs because although it is crude like "Little Britain" (hence not a show for kids), the show has a sick and sadistic quality that sets it apart from all these shows. In particular, animal cruelty and serial killing are recurring themes throughout the show.Now if you haven't guessed, this is NOT a show for kids, the easily offended or normal people and that's probably why I liked it. However, you really do need very thick skin and a love of the awful to enjoy this to the max. Funny and incredibly irreverent beyond belief--you have to see it to believe it.